Showing posts with label Fall The. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fall The. Show all posts

Monday, 28 April 2025

The Ups And Downs

It's finally time for me to write about The Fall for LFTY! I've been holding off picking one since the year-themed specials began, and this is the one that got up and waved to me.


THE FALL – LEVITATE (Artful) 

“There is no culture is my brag,” declaimed Mark E Smith in 1982, but he might equally have stated, “There is no consensus concerning my oeuvre”. There are many noteworthy things about The Fall, but one that rarely gets mentioned is how little agreement there is amongst admirers about what constitutes the best material. Beatles fans might argue at length about minutiae of the fab output, but as close to none of them as makes no difference think With The Beatles is better than Revolver, whereas no randomly selected bunch of Fallophiles would get close to honing in what are the best and worst records. Perhaps this is because all Fall albums contain gold cushioned in straw, a mixture of incredible music and perplexing old nonsense, sometimes in consecutive bars (and perhaps this is what makes them so constantly mystifying and exciting). But even so, 1997’s Levitate is an album that is rarely top of anyone’s pantheon, as it’s an awkward, uneven album, where jokes fall flat and smiles turn sinister, where euphoria comes with a hint of wintry regret, where musical inspiration comes with a scribbled Post-It note saying “Will this do?”. 

And I’m here to claim that this is what makes it essential to the story of The Fall. 

First up, let’s dismiss the historical context. Yes, this is the last album to feature the great Steve Hanley on bass, The Fall’s longest-serving non-ranting member, and it was released not long before the Brownies incident, in which the group collapsed on a NYC stage and after which MES was arrested. People claim you can hear the tension on this record, but I’m not sure it is any more true here than in many other places. Nope, the reason this record sounds so odd is that it has the credit “produced by Mark E Smith”, and may be the closest we’ll get to the inexplicable sound that hummed in his head. 

First up, there’s undeniably good music here. ‘Ten Houses Of Eve’ is built using a Fisher Price My First Breakbeat TM with a tarmac-thick vocal trill/hook borrowed from The Seeds’ ‘Evil Hoodoo’.  The breakdown - or do I mean stumbling halt? – which laments “If only the shards could relocate” over eerie piano is lovely. ‘Hurricane Edward’ oozes melancholy and you can almost feel a cutting wind blowing across stubbly autumnal fields even as you have no idea what the lyric about a farmhand might mean. ‘4 ½ Inch’ is an industrial car-crusher trying to do big beat, and is glorious. ‘The Quartet Of Doc Shanley’ has an amazing sludgy bassline, which said S Hanley later admitted to nicking off The Osmonds, of all people. The Wire’s reviewer noted that ‘Jungle Rock’ best encapsulates the Fall sound, even though it’s a cover; certainly the tuning and wonky antidub space in the mix would not pass muster in the majority of bands.  

‘Spencer Must Die’ is hypnotic and chilly with whispered lyrics, and is forgettable, but only in the sense that it’s a wonderful discovery every spin. It ends pretty much in the middle of a phrase, which brings us on to the strange portion of the record. ‘I’m A Mummy’ is a tossed-off 50s novelty song with some toxic trebly guitar, and it’s hard to work out why it’s here, or indeed, anywhere. ‘Masquerade’ sounds as though 40% of the track is missing, a messily syncopated inscrutable little song.  ‘I Come And Stand At Your [sic] Door’ is a plodding cover of the famous song-poem about a young Hiroshima victim, which almost sounds touching, though this effect is minimised by the redundant instrumental version’s unsavoury, dismissive name, ‘Jap Kid’ (I mean, come on). ‘Ol’ Gang’ is a good scuzzy kraut groove, utterly marred by the quarter-arsed vocals which seem to have been dubbed (daubed) on at the last minute and which feature almost the same hackneyed opening couplet as THE PREVIOUS TRACK. The title track is a simple little tune with the drums mixed as loud as the rest of the band put together, and it’s likable but, again, feels overbalanced. 

Add to this the fuzzy disco-pop of ‘Everybody But Myself’ which sounds as though it was mastered from a fourth-generation C90, and ‘Tragic Days’, a pointless 90 seconds of tape noise, and that’s the album. Levitate falls almost exactly in the middle of The Fall’s recording career, 18 years after their debut album and 18 years before their swan song. It sounded wrong and illogical on release, and still has the power to confuse and enrage. It’s a mystery, wrapped in an enigma, wrapped in a shit mix. It is great because it has no desire to be great, and doesn’t know or care when it’s awful. It captures the purest essence of The Fall. 

I have literally this second realised that the album’s title basically means the opposite of the band’s name. That contradiction is the album in a nutshell. It’s essential. You probably shouldn’t buy it.  

Tuesday, 26 December 2023

Fall Again. Fall Better.

Round 2 of the Fall Cup has now finished, and we are into the knockout stages.  Check out the story to date at The Fall Cup if you a) know lots of Fall tracks, and b) want to be annoyed that we don't like the same Fall tracks you do.

Once again, I've decided to share all the comments I made.  This time, the voting was complex, and we were able to distribute a total score bank between 12 tracks each match, but I just commented on the 5 tracks to whom I'd given the lowest score each match, so that the process was in line with round 1; the difference, of course, is that I was giving low marks to more tracks that I actively enjoy, so there are fewer snide put-downs, and therefore more abstract flights of critical fancy.  As with Round 1, it's interesting to see how many times I repeated myself over the weeks - sorry.


The Birmingham School of Business School: A lead-footed funk number with one of Smith's most deliberately ugly vocal noises at the start  ("Mum, can we have wah-wah guitar?", "Oh, no we have wah-wah at home").  

Youwanner: Relentless yet building in intensity, like being trapped in the engine room of a rickety ship at full steam, cogs and sprockets flying off at all angles. 

Victoria Train Station Massacre/ New Facts Emerge: Like the novel Cujo if it had been glam rock that had gone rabid.

Arms Control Poseur: A guardedly wary shimmy, marred by hideous guitar scribbles.

ROD: Eeriness from the dressing-up box, not the heart of terror.

Can Can Summer: Beautifully twitchy, a Talking Heads for those who prefer brown ale to cappuccino.

I Feel Voxish: Peak Shanley insistence plus MES as inscrutable life coach.

Petty (Thief) Lout: Crepuscular, if not spectacular.

Das Vulture Ans Ein Nutter-Wain: Unidentifiable fragments of matter floating in a greasy ramen.

YFOC/ Slippy Floor: The sound is great on the LP version, but the final band did one or two too many of these anonymous unriffs.

Two Librans: A lumbering dyspeptic churn of a song.

Copped It: Love the way the serrated guitar vies for space with the huge rolling bass.

Sons Of Temperance: There's a lovely furry mould growing around the low end, but the song itself is an indie chant by rote.

Rainmaster: A fun, but ultimately inconsequential, rectilinear stomp.

Amorator!: Another with a brilliant sound, like a transcription of a long uncertain growl from a tipsy dog, but there's not quite enough musical material here for me.

Barmy: It should be illegal to rhyme barmy with army, especially if you've already doen it in a different song.  Good Velvety pounding track, though.

The Aphid: It's pretty much Rainmaster with extra pep, isn't it?  Decent, but nobody's conception of the greatest Fall song, one suspects.

Coach & Horses: A rather charming miniature, better than many of the longer and more imposing tracks on RPTLC.

Pacifying Joint: That dumbass keyboard line can be pretty annoying if youre not in the mood.

Over! Over!: Everything about this sounds forced, it's a hothouse bloom, and withers under scrutiny.

All Leave Cancelled: Fungus growing rampant on a folk rock tune, or perhaps a possessed R.E.M. song.  Sometimes more fascinating than good, but proof that Fall Sound is more than krautabilly.

Bombast: This is possibly the twentieth-century Fall track that most anticipates final line-up Fall.  A great noise, with one of Shanley's heaviest anchors.  Still maintain "bombast" doesn't make sense as a synonym for "tirade", mind.

I Wake Up In The City: In the inevitable comparison, Classmates' Kids has better lyrics, and this has a much better forward-leaning performance.  There's not enough of it to get many points, but it still deserves a nod.

Cosmos 7: One of the tracks for which the illogical mixing of EGB works in its favour, it does sound like a broadcast picked up by a 60s cosmonaut.

My Door Is Never: I have officially run out ways to say that it's sad that a band as good as the dudes made such an undercooked album.

Backdrop: It's Wings: The Opera.  Some amazing lines, though the gin couplet always felt a bit facile.

Cab It Up!: That synglock line is so much fun, it sounds like something from a Ronnie Hazelhurst sit-com theme.

Dktr Faustus: A lot of the criticism directed towards Brix seems to be unfair enough to border on misogyny, but I have to say her vocals spoil this track.  Banana, yourself!

Contraflow: My wife always says this sounds like Rage Against The Machine.  Not sure I agree, and I like it a lot, but it will never be more than an album track.

OFYC Showcase: The album version has an excellent sound - perhaps those Domino studio types weren't such a chain around the neck as has been reported - but there's still not enough of it for me to love.

Junger Cloth: The words are great - Yog-Sothoth gets an eye test - but the music plods somewhat.

Carry Bag Man: Middle-tier Fall in every respect.

Guest Informant: We spent so many years trying to make out that "Bazdad" bit we didn't notice how annoying that "Bazdad" bit was.  The rest of the song's good.

Cruiser's Creek: Big chunky Duplo blocks of musical material laid out far into the distance.

No Respects: MES in catarrh hero mode, band set to "forgettable".

Elves: If you can ignore the Stooges larceny, this is a great song; but you can't, can you.

Pine Leaves: 90s Fall had some wonderful moments of quantised melancholy.

Impression of J Temperance: This song is so strong, that I'm always let down that it concludes "ha, he fucked a dog, mate".

Oxymoron: In some ways it would be perfect if a bashed out thump featuring vocal samples from another song won the cup.  Smash the canon, destroy hegemonies! Amuse our friends, enrage your enemies!  Sorry, where was I?  Oh, this track - it's OK, I suppose.

Second House Now: Forceful, but nondescript rock.

Gross Chapel-British Grenadiers: The murky, photocopied-newsprint texture is wonderful, but it may not need to last for over 7 minutes.

The Chiselers: Cracks along like a funicular railway at the highest setting - loses points because we didn't really need so many versions where the same sections are just shuffled into different orders.

Black Monk Theme Part I: One can't really improve on The Monks, but the dizzying fiddle encompassing Mark's deadpan vocals is a nice touch.

Brillo De Facto: Excellent vox on this one, a superb example of the late MES strangle-gurgle delivery, and tightly played, but the riff doesn't stand out from the crowd.

The Crying Marshall: A gold-plated example of a track that works excellently on its album, but feels featherlight in isolation.

50 Year Old Man: The epic collage album version is great, but I've docked points for some live versions that just bludgeon the joy out of it (the From The Basement performance is excellent though).

Mountain Energei: A gorgeous repurposing of The Passenger, for which I wish I had more points.

Words Of Expectation: An example of true krautrock discipline, I would just prefer it without the wormy section - and the lyric dissing Leicester Poly is pretty unadventurous.

Cyber Insekt: The atonal Ballroom Blitz trundle of the album version is glorious, but again, this is a track that got smoothed out and bleached in live performances until there wasn't much left to get excited about.

Solicitor In Studio: Some good lines, and a nice tortured glam feel to the music, but it lacks the cohesion and power of so much other 1982 material.

Various Times: A jaundiced travelogue through the twentieth century.

What You Need: Riff, list, and chant, the three main ingredients for a Fall song - but perhaps this track needs another flavour to be one of the greats.

Gut Of The Quantifier: The gruppe as funk revue.

Fall Sound: Some choice lines and delivery, but arguably the music is too on the nose, Fall-soundwise.

Ol' Gang: Way to ruin a glorious dirty groove, Smith.

Look, Know: The most lumbering lifestyle tips in history.

Gibbus Gibson: A cheeky Monkees-flavoured bit of bounce.

Joker Hysterical Face: Ramshackle and untethered.

Deadbeat Descendant: Played with passion and vim, but the riff is frustratingly uninspiring.

Jam Song: This is so nearly very good, but falters at the gate.  Maybe stop jamming and start honing?

Janet, Johnny & James: That good ol' boy clawhammer riff just keeps on scuttling.

Crop Dust: A texture so loamy enough Percy Thrower is probably the studio engineer.

My New House: It's the layers of detuned guitars that make this track.

Reformation!: Blindness without the shimmy.  Worked live, but isn't an essential Fall document.

Wolf Kidult Man: A functional thump, arguably, though an effective one.

The Quartet Of Doc Shanley: Steal a bassline, turn up the distortion, cut up some spoken nonsense, go down the pub.

Fiery Jack: A fantastic piece of CnN that I may have worn the sheen off on first discovery.

Jim's "The Fall": If Mudhoney were bewildered wasps at the end of the summer, they might make music like this.

Auto Tech Pilot: Played with boxing gloves on, but none the worse for that.

Auto Chip 2014-2016: I'm not sue why I don't love this as so many other people do: I like The Fall, I like Neu!, what am I missing?

Gramme Friday: Blues rock fractured, dispersed, and awkwardly reassembled.

The Remainderer: The grimy gurgle of a bath full of custard emptying in 4/4.

Sinister Waltz: The whispering of a guilty conscience in 3/4.

And This Day: Imposing and brutal, but - whisper it - too long.

Tommy Shooter: A gloriously sleek and honed band working through threadbare material.

Fol De Rol: Ludic and malevolent in equal measure.

Powder Keg: Sounds like a traffic jam made into pop music.

Loadstones: A good song, but it also sounds like The Oysterband.

(Jung Nev's) Antidotes: I love the cement-mixer churn, and regret that there aren't more points laying about for this one.

Sir William Wray: Throwaway by design, it seems that giving it points would be against the spirit, fun though it is to listen to.

Friday, 10 November 2023

Fall Downers

I have been fortunate enough to have been invited to be part of a select coterie of judges to vote on a massive competition to rate every track recorded by the mighty Fall by Steve Pringle, author of the excellent You Must Get Them All, a guide to The Fall on record.  You can find the whole monstrous endeavour here.

We have just finished stage one, in which every track was rated in a series of 15-track groups, using Eurovision scores (if you don't know how Eurovision scores are allocated, who even are you?).  This meant that 5 tracks per group got zero points.  We were invited to share thoughts on each round, and I elected to write about those to whom I gave the goose egg, which probably indicates a negative outlook, but hey ho.  Steve only had space to quote a few notes from each of us in the final blog posts, so here for your edification or enragement, are my full comments on all 160 tracks which scored nothing.  Feel free to disagree (the rest of the voting panel often did, after all).  Also, you can se how many times I repeated myself over the weeks.

The Littlest Rebel: There’s a question on how one should judge a track, of how one discerns its purpose.  On Extricate, this track fits in nicely and does its job well.  I feel that the album would be less without it.  But, do I want to put it on and listen to it in isolation and then walk away?  Do I want this tidy but foursquare 60s bop commanding my full attention?  I’m not sure I do.  So, bye then.  (The harmonica is good, mind.) 

Laptop Dog: Computers are rubbish, says man who decided what they were in 1983.  Laptops are rubbish says man who has never used a laptop.  People who like laptops are rubbish says man who once saw someone he didn’t like using one, which is a bit like criticising socks because Kenny G wears them.  Course, I’ll tell you what’s really rubbish: uninteresting snare drum rhythms mixed too loud. 

The Joke: Everyone likes tracks that begin Fall gigs, because no matter how average they might be compositionally, they are the gateway into an hour or so of gigging excitement (or, in many cases in The Joke’s tenure as opener, at least confirm that the gig will go ahead in some form or other).  But, you know, it's not really good musically or lyrically, and we must confront that truth. 

Jap Kid: Why hasn’t this been merged with I Come And Stand At Your Door?  It’s getting short shrift on its own.  Of course, Levitate is a mystery wrapped in an enigma wrapped in a MES production credit, and this track works perfectly as part of its half-arsed half-drunk half-finished genius, but outside of that environment where logic is jettisoned and sense is a distant memory, it can’t stand up for itself. 

ROD: This is the track I suspect I’ll be alone in down-voting.  There’s a lot that’s good about it, and it very near made the grade, but ultimately I find the attempt at gothic eeriness in the verse too obvious, and the chorus too short and clunky, and I wish that Craig would stop noodling about and play a riff or go away.  You disagree, you think this is brilliant, but you’re wrong and if this competition helps you to realise that, then it was not entirely pointless. 

Rose: You hear that wah-wah going?  Remember you started it.  Now make it stop and think about what you’ve done. 

Pearl City: Of all the songs exploring why businessmen might want to eat Chinese food, this may be the best.  Pyrrhic victory, though, because it’s going down. 

Why Are People Grudgeful?: Mostly they’re not.  There’s nothing wrong with this, it’s unlucky to lose out, but still, Sir [Joe] Gibbs’s version is better, and Lee Perry’s People Funny Boy which inspired it might be even better.  Mark had great taste in Jamaican music, but he didn’t have the knack of replicating it. 

Muzoweri’s Daughter: I’ve always found the migraine guitar and the spavin-gaited changes of tempo incredibly annoying, but it’s the lyrics that really turn me away from this song, which always just sound like “ooga-booga, silly Africans” to me. I’m prepared to believe something else is intended, but I’m damned if I can tell what it is. 

Last Orders: I do love the sound of extremely early Fall, that clash between punk snottiness, nursery rhyme simplicity, and preposterous stadium tom fills, but I’m not sure that this is the track to celebrate them with. 

High Tension Line: Some tracks achieve no points, and some tracks have no points thrust upon them.  I always expected the give this mostly harmless single a point or 2, until I found that I hadn’t.  Them’s the breaks.  It always makes me want to listen to Lamonte Young instead, anyway. 

Rollin’ Dany: I don’t begrudge The Fall kicking back and knocking out an old rock n roll tune every now and then, but it rarely results in gold. Dany has already been a double A-side, which is more than it could possibly have expected, so I’m not going to give it points as well, otherwise it will have to go and have a lie down. 

Get A Hotel: As forgettable and inoffensive as the artworks in the Travelodge lift lobby.  The best part is a Big Youth lyric. 

Don’t Call Me Darling: Another that lost because it didn’t win. A plump-bellied roadhouse boogie enlivened by Brix’s grunge-angled chorus delivery. 

Hands Up Billy: Awful song, end of.  The only real pleasure I get from this is imagining it’s about James Herriott examining a goat for bowel troubles. 

New Formation Sermon: This is a backroom jam.  The Fall should improvise, extemporise, and ad lib, but they must never jam. 

Junk Man: I respect the ugliness of this cover, it sounds like a Punch & Judy show with a terrible hangover, but that may not be something we always want in our ears. 

WMC-Blob 59: I think that this works perfectly on the album, and always feel it’s unfair when it is referred to as one of the first piss tracks, but I can’t vote for it in isolation; Jesus, I’ve already given points to Papal Visit, the Fall Fans’ Proper Song Protection League  will be after me as it is. 

A Lot OF Wind: Oh, great Mark, share with us your searing insights into our society!  What’s that?  Giles Brandreth’s knitwear is garish, and the discussion on Pebble Mill At One tend towards the inconsequential?  Truly thy satirical eye is laser-focussed, Lord. 

I African Mancunian: This could have been good had it been finished, but it wasn’t so it isn’t. 

Age of Chang: Group 5 is pretty tough, and this would have got through on other rounds.  Musically this is generic, but the vocals sound as though they’re played from a musty cassette found in the vestibule of some eldritch monastery, which is a vast tick in the Pro column. 

The City Never Sleeps: I like the way that the cheesy synth has a different voice pretty much every time it shoulders its way in, but a one-off clunky cover was never going to make it against such opposition. 

Anecdotes + Antidotes in B#: Less a song, more a pitched pile of rubble. I like it, actually, but not enough. 

Wise Ol’ Man: A typical, but perhaps forgettable, example of a late Fall pop tune.  Yet another that I’d like to have given a point to in round 5. 

Hark The Herald Angels Sing: I fear that this is a joke I don’t get. 

Tragic Days: What is this?  There is no musical or non-musical reason for this to exist.  It is meaningless to judge it against any existing parameters.  It can consider its lack of points a victory, I guess. 

Tom Ragazzi: If Anecdotes got zero, then Ragazzi definitely gets zero. 

Pilsner Trail: Like a sketchbook for ideas that would reappear in different songs, this is interesting, but was rightly discarded by the group. 

The Ballard of J.Drummer: A pervading myth in Fall criticism is that Mark was a great story-teller.  In fact, he was mostly pretty poor at linear narrative, though he could sketch a great lysergic vignette.  Sadly, as well as being a barely coherent Western exemplum and/or spot of half-arsed Burns-baiting, this track is also musically valueless. 

Hungry Freaks, Daddy: In which The Dudes take a bludgeon to a cornerstone of counter-culture rock, and flatten 80% of the song.  Incidentally, I’m always surprised MES liked Zappa so much, I’d have thought a lot of it were too smug and muso for him (I know it is for me). 

Hey! Fascist / Hey! Student: It’s not terrible as a clod-hopping grease-punk track, but what really disappoints is that in 1993 MES sat around and thought “What’s as bad as actual Nazis?  Oh yeah, students. They’re the same.  They’re exactly the same, let’s suggest they all get kicked in the head.  That’ll tell them”.    

Birthday: If John Quays did indeed get “out of his face to The Idle Race”, this hideous cruise-ship rendition of one of their songs would have sobered him up in milliseconds. 

Recipe for Fascism: Levitate is a gloriously strange experience.  The bonus disc is merely a strange experience.  This track is barely an experience. 

Victoria:  Good song, I feel obliged to note.  And not a bad cover, they bring some new things to the original.  But there’s just not quite enough to it to get to the next round.  We are very slightly amused. 

Insult Song: Of all the micro-genres of Fall songs, the “Mark ribs the band” category is my least favourite; I don’t give a shit about your japes, I’m not your friend.  This is definitely the best of the batch, but it’s still getting a duck egg. 

Outro: Dum dum dum....dum dum dum...dum dum dum...dumb dumb dumb... 

The $500 Bottle Of Wine: SHanley’s rolling millwheel bass nearly got this one over the line.  The wine might have been rich, spicy and full-bodied, but this is a thin and tasteless concoction. 

986 Generator: Why are The Fall playing this generic country vamp, and, more to the point, why are they doing it for what feels like nine hours? 

Over! Over: That forced “I’m mad, me!” laugh destroys this hasty respray of a half-inched tune, which otherwise might have snuck into the victory paddock.  I don’t love it, and I never did. 

White Lightning: Give me enough snakebites and black and I dare say I’d wow the indie disco busting moves to this sprightly take on an old rock warhorse, but ask me to pick it as a Fall track worth celebrating, and you’ll expect short shrift. 

Mr. Pharmacist: Extra!  Extra!  Garage chug staled by extensive exposure!   

Stay Away (Old White Train): When Simpo couldn’t find Karl Burns when writing The Fallen, I can only assume he was hiding from the shame of this vocal. 

Where’s The F***in Taxi? C**t: I have been to the Jude The Obscure pub in Oxford on a few occasions.  It gets mentioned in this track.  You’ll have to take my word for it, because you’ll never listen to it again. 

North West Fashion Show: It’s Mark Ribs The Band: The Remix.  oh joy.  Also, surely Richard and Judy couldn’t have bastard offspring...at least, not with each other. 

My Door Is Never: Shoots for krauty hypnosis, hits clumsy playground chant.  Like lots of RPTLC it was better live. 

Hollow Mind: In the name of all that’s holy, let the corpse of Jerusalem rest, this shambling reanimated cadaver can aid no man. 

Afternoon Disco: This is a lightly diverting funk sketch.  I can imagine it sprouting into a good track, but this never happened. 

The Bad Stuff: Some of the sawdust bulking out the budget-range sausage that is RPTLC.  

Clasp Hands: Unlucky not to make the cut in a tough group, this cheeky rocker trundles like a toy train, held together by elastic bands and fuelled by Woodbine butts. 

Overture from “I am Curious Orange”: An attractive, melancholy chord progressions with some elegantly simple picking.  It’s a pity Brix didn’t make something more of this, or at least had the courage to leave it an instrumental. 

The Usher: Unlike lots of the shorter tracks on RPTLC, this feels slight, rather than unfinished, and it’s actually rather pleasing.

Symbol of Mordgan: What training do you need for discussion, at your own level, regarding whether someone failing to learn a riff whilst listening to the radio is worth putting on an album? 

Hot Aftershave Bop: This track was destined for a half-cut boogie, not the hallowed pantheon.  It won’t mind getting voted out. 

The Book of Lies: The pronunciation of “lah-hah-hize" is surely one of the least appealing moments in The Fall’s catalogue.  The rest of the song is alright. 

Live at the Witch Trials: Like a little pond snail, this does a very useful job in its natural habitat, but shrivels and dies swiftly on removal. 

The Coliseum: Sometimes the thing that turns an OK track into a good one is someone stopping the tape after the first four and a half minutes. 

O.F.Y.C. Showcase: Created in a lab to work well opening gigs, this doesn’t excite as much as the rest of the album when isolated. 

Vixen:  Passable whiny chug 

Bournemouth Runner: There’s a hollowness here, a feeling that the constituent parts don’t hang together, that something is missing, whether it be more musical material or just a bit more chutzpah in the performance.  Funny topic for a lyric, mind. 

Beatle Bones ‘n’ Smokin’ Stones: A pretty decent stab at the Beefheart song, considering it was almost certainly unrehearsed – but that harsh guitar tone sounds like toothache. 

Jingle Bell Rock: My colleague used to have a reindeer that sang this song, which she’d turn on multiple times a day every December.  This version is much better than that, but the trauma runs deep.  

Idiot Joy Showland: Congratulations, barn door hit confirmed, Marksman Smith. 

Underground Medecin: Far from a bad little piece of early Fall, but we just don’t need so many “we’re ace cos we take drugs, yeah?” songs. 

Cruiser’s Creek: A very unfair zero for a chunky, if slightly overlong, single. 

Touchy Pad: The second zero I regret having to award, for a concise and mysterious piece of late Fall weird. 

No Respects/No Respects Rev: It mostly lost points for that pointless non-version that fades out. 

Cloud of Black: I just listened to this, to check what it was like, but I’ve alredy forgotten. 

White Lines: Pffffft. 

D.I.Y Meat: The Fall do classic rock.  I’m quite fond of this one, actually, but someone’s got to go. 

Zandra: B-sides gonna B-side, I guess.  Good on ‘em, not doing nobody no harm. 

Just Waiting: This is the round where we test the truism that the covers are the worst tracks.  This is fine, quite a nice little indie country lope, and probably better than the average cover, yet here we are. Props to Grass Grow for sounding great. 

Popcorn Double Feature: Poor song + overly smooth reading = 0 

Legend Of Xanadu: I adore this song, just one of Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick & Titch’s corkers, but MES just can’t manage the vocal.  I’ve voted for Light/Fireworks anyway, so it still sneaks in. 

Hit the North: Frankly, this only got relegated because all those mixes dilute the taste. 

Second House Now: Frankly, this only got relegated because the lounge band intro gets on my thruppenies. 

Ivanhoe’s Two Pence: Nice enough little track, though it’s essentially what you get if you cross Time Enough At last with Paintwork, and take out the oomph. 

Zagreb: There’s nothing wrong with this, but since when has adequacy been an artistic yardstick? 

Gotta See Jane: Worst cover of all; there, I said it. 

Pledge: Pleasingly ramshackle, but yet another entry into the catalogue of 21st-century songs where Mark is angry about something despite clearly barely understanding it. 

Xmas With Simon: Christmas songs annoy me at the best of times. 

Butterflies 4 Brains/Whizz Bang: Far from being a bad song, but if only it whizzed and banged a little more. 

White Line Fever: MES as Tony Clifton, serenading a suspicious audience, with equal contempt displayed on both sides. 

Oswald Defence Lawyer: One of those Fall songs where everything’s in place, but it doesn’t gel.  Here we have a repetitive riff, revisionist history, and baroquely obscure imagery, but it still drags. 

Noise: Mark ribs the band, but this time over a loop; be still, my beating heart. 

Louie Louie: Meaningless to judge this: they’re playing Louie Louie badly, they know they’re playing it badly, they’re happy they’re playing it badly.  Shorn of experiential context there’s very little we can do with this except file it historically.   

The Crying Marshal: Crunchy and chunky, but doesn’t have the strength to hold onto the life raft. 

Cheetham Hill: Equally scrunchy sonically, but again a touch featherlight, so it’s out.  There’s no need to go berserk. 

Life Just Bounces: A mildly annoying ascending/descending figure coupled with lyrics that were clearly written as prose and squeezed into the metre. 

O! Zztrrk Man: The murk is commendable, but the net impact is minor. 

The Wright Stuff: As much as I adore Eleni singing the riff between her teeth, this one is going down. 

Assume: A good honest barrel along a greasy riff which doesn’t deserve zero, but neither does it deserve to win any awards.

The Acute: Do I look like I have on my forehead “I’ll accept any quarter-arsed shit with The Fall on the cover”? 

Squid Law/Squid Lord: Tell us you want to cover Junk Man without telling us you’re covering Junk Man.

Solicitor in Studio: There’s an awful lot to like here, but 1982’s output was so preposterously brilliant that this pales.  Killed by context. 

I’ve Been Duped: It was always nice to give Eleine a spotlight/Mark a fag break, but on record it’s somewhat lacking. 

Happy Holiday: I own 2 versions of this.  Sometimes I’m not proud of my choices. 

Latch Key Kid: IWS is a great album, but really this sounds like all the other bits of the album squished together.  

Kick the Can: Who will win in this epic battle between thin garage and stunted rockabilly?  Boredom will. 

Say Mama / Race With The Devil: I actually rather like Say Mama, but the forced and unnecessary smash into that boozy take on Race infuriates. 

Nate Will Not Return: This is not great, with the power to irritate, it is dead weight, I have sealed its fate. 

Room To Live: Round 21 is so tough I’m reduced to slightly arbitrary choices for what to eject.  I’ve never liked Riley’s chintzy little guitar line on live versions of this track, so, farewell, then...   

Octo Realm / Ketamine Sun: Octo is hilarious.  Ketamine is a decent example of The Fall’s “clearly influenced by” category, but it isn’t enough in a tough group. 

Susan vs. Youthclub: Speaking of ketamine, this sounds like a pop song in a K-hole after a couple of bongs and a Benylin spritzer. 

Mask Search: This is what people who haven’t heard a Fall album since 1987 think they sound like after 2000.  in their defence, they did this once. 

Choc-Stock: Its heart is in the right place, but it’s just too much of a bloody mess to truly love.  

Spinetrak: Not so much bad, as overly typical of the era. 

Italiano: Why on earth wasn’t this lumped with Oleano, when it’s clearly the original demo idea?  Obviously never going to get through.  It doesn’t even sound very italian (though On My Own does). 

Van Plague?: I nearly put this through for “rancid kid drowned in lagoon” alone.  

Ol’ Gang: Had this been an instrumental, I’d be pouring points on it.  Alas, Mark’s input is not only unnecessary, it mars the whole experience with poor timing, lazy rhymes, and tedious moaning about management types.

On My Own: Nice little track, but nice gets you nowhere in this world, bub. 

Tuff Life Boogie: Adequate B-side shimmy let down by annoying vocal hook.

Theme from Error-Orrori: Such a sluggish performance, it’s like some rough beast slouching towards Italy to be ignored.

Irish: You know when you make a bar of soap from all the slivers from the other bars of soap, and it works, but it’s a bit sloppy?  That’s what this is regarding final-era Fall songs. 

Serum: Quite good, in its way, with a fat rhythmic punch, but lacking in true character. 

Terry Waite Sez: I never worked out what this is for.  The only thing of which I am certain is that the tale about it being about a different Terry Waite from down the pub is steaming shite. 

And Therein: A song that is not bad at all in its original form, but proved too easy to teach new band members, and so we are burdened with a clutch of uninspired plods along its riff. 

Dead Beat Descendant: There’s a little clutch of terpsichorean late 80s tracks, about bops and boogies and dances.  They’re all perfectly alright, and none of them are particularly special.

The War Against Intelligence: Fine, but ironically short on ideas. 

Gibbus Gibson: A strange ditty, and one to which it is sad to give no points, but equally one which cannot command anything more. 

Jam Song: If you need to have it explained why a Fall track called “Jam Song” gets zero you’ve missed the whole fucking point. 

Middle Class Revolt: A socio-economic trend report wandering in a digital miasma, albeit one with a slightly annoying keyboard line. 

I’m Frank: Jaunty, priapic, and rather good.  It lost a point for sounding cock all like Frank Zappa, which was enough for an early bath in this group. 

Extricate: This chugs mightily pleasantly, but it won’t chug its way to the medal podium, will it? 

Arid Al’s Dream: That lovely guitar part should have had a better song to house it.  This is decent fare, but you can see why it was thrown away on a compilation. 

Stepping Out: Strong, in its way, and must have been powerful at those very early gigs, but it;s an example of nascent promise, rather than fully fledged glory 

Psycho Mafia: Like my comment on Stepping Out, only much more so.

2×4: Merely one of the crowd from the Beggars era.  It’s a nice crowd to be part of, mind. 

What About Us?: Not a bad tune, all things considered, but I’ve always thought the response to a serial murderer in the healthcare profession being “drugs are cool, heh heh” to be a little depressing.

Hilary: I might have scored this more highly if they’d not recorded Grass Grow, it's like Houdini revealing his tricks. 

Groundsboy: Sad to see this one go, it’s an odd and unforced little track painting a micro-vignette. 

Distilled Mug Art: The “three voice memos playing at once” feel is good, but that guitar noodling is so drab. 

Greenway: Beware of Greeks bearing riffs, in case you end up making stodgy pap like this. 

Dice Man: I like punk attitude and Bo Diddley as much as the next man, but this, alas, is inessential. 

Snazzy: The strangely antiquated slang of the title is the best thing about this.  In that spirit, I declare it to be “cruddy”. 

Funnel of Love: A fair shot at a cover, but it doesn’t quicken the pulse. 

Two Face!: For (another) Batman-influenced song, this is somewhat lacking in BIFF!  POW!  and KRAKK! 

Reprise: Jane – Prof Mick – Ey Bastardo: Mark ribs the band, except it’s only one of the band and there’s some boring drums and I don’t bloody know it’s just atrocious and can I turn it off now? 

I’m Not Satisfied: Mark’s love of Zappa doesn’t seem congruent with many of his opinions (although I think really Mark had a love of Mothers of Invention, not the other twelvety hundred solo albums).  This is not a great shot at a cover. 

Pittsville Direkt: The only interesting thing about this song is how uninteresting it is.  Even giving it a listen for this round, I found it hard to pay attention. 

Married, 2 Kids: Has some funny lyrics, but musically it leaves the Colman’s uncloven. 

Session Musician: Top tip: if you’re going to write a song berating hack musicians, ensure your own composition isn’t generic.

To Nkroachment: Yarbles: I prefer the instrumental version (and would have merged them together, but I’m not in charge, so whatever).

Don’t take the Pizza: The song is OK, if hardly top tier, but the coy obscuration of the word piss annoys me, from the band that would release Where’s The Fuckin Taxi, Cunt? 

Lucifer Over Lancashire: That “son of shave and a haircut” rhythm becomes rather annoying after a while. 

Das Katerer: The timing is clunky on The Unutterable. The version on Post-Nearly man is better, but I suppose is not admissible as evidence.   

Breaking the Rules: Why not just play the cover, instead of writing some new but not very exciting lyrics?  Is it a tax dodge? 

Mad.Men-Eng.Dog: I’m a big fan of a Smith tape collage, but in this case the tape is apparently made from hessian and silt, and it’s just a bit too art brut(ish).

Scenario: Two found texts shoved together without any real meaning, plus a riff you already stole once this album, does not equal songwriting glory. 

Happi Song: A very nice little ditty, but little ditty it is, and little ditties aren't quite enough to go through.

Jungle Rock: I love the greasy barely tuned sound of this, it feels as though it will leave a sticky residue on your speakers, but the novelty song is not precisely towering genius. 

Segue: A travesty.  At least it’s short. 

Loop 41 Houston: I’m rather fond of Loop 41.  I’d like to hear the previous 40, instead of a chuckle-headed Dean Martin cover. 

The Steak Place: Better than I remembered it; not as good as I’d like t to be. 

Portugal: Kind of a fun bubbleglam pastiche, but I just feel achingly sorry for the letter writer, supercilious though his tone is.  If someone threw snotballs at me at work I’d quit too.   

Systematic Abuse: And then a little later, the band filed the same charges.  Anyway, this should be a great krauty groove, but somehow it isn’t - just more evidence of RPTLC being undercooked.

Unutterable: I was going to write something about this track after listening but I have already forgotten how it went.

Rude (All the time): Blaney may well have been a good friend to Mark, but he certainly added some crappy old guitar strumming to some of the songs...and here there’s not really anything else. 

Ibis-Afro Man: Unlike many people, I see this as a noble failure rather than a farce, and I salute it as it inevitably disappears form the competition. 

Quit iPhone: Certainly the best of the “Old man yells at iCloud” group of late Fall songs, but it can’t quite hold onto a point here. 

Cary Grant’s Wedding: I’ve just never worked out what this is supposed to be.  Is it time for “What do you mean, ‘What’s it mean, what’s it mean?’?”?   


Saturday, 28 November 2009

Trust In God But Tie Up Your Camus

The Fall, as you surely all know, are one of the most significant artistic endeavours of the past 50 years. Here's a review of a good gig. The Fall will never make the perfect LP or play the life-changing concert, and that's why they are great, they keep hacking away at their chosen paths, entangled and untrodden. I saw them in Oxford a couple of weeks ago. It was a bit of a mess. I saw them two nights ago in Leamington Spa Assembly Halls (amazing venue, Jesus the O2 Academies up and down the land look so drab by comparison) and it was just glorious. I will always prefer an act that alternately misfire and rockets, to one that smoothly zips slongs. This review was hard to write, as it was diofficult to keep a response to 30 years of The Fall out of it, and it's not one for the annals, but I do like the opening sentence.

THE FALL, Zodiac, 4/07

For over thirty years now The Fall has existed as a belligerently independent fiefdom jostling between the perennially warring kingdoms of Prog and Punk, with Mark E Smith as its twisted jester-prince. A new year brings a new tour and, not uncommonly, a new band, so it’s no shock to discover that Smith’s third wife, keyboard twitcher Elini, is the only person onstage surviving since The Fall’s last Oxford visit, fewer than 18 months ago. Perhaps more surprising is that the new lads are primarily American alt musos and not the sort of “unlearned “ musicians from which Smith has traditionally built his army: guitarist Tim Presley at times indulges in the sort of fiery, Sonic Youth rocking that would have earned earlier band members a severe dressing down. Probably between verses.

Odd frills excepted, however, this is still clearly The Fall as we know them, sludgily pummelling garage guitars, krautische Korg synth buzzes and relentless glam rockabilly drum patterns topped off by an impenetrable, yet oddly mesmerising drawl. Smith’s voice, a long way from his youthful yelp, is a worn piece of shoe leather, cracked and ugly, yet far more malleable than many fresher alternatives. A track like “My Door”, far more satisfying live than on the recent Reformation Post T. L. C. album, reveals just how subtly expressive Smith’s voice can be, once you’ve tuned into the cosmically unmelodic frequency on which he works. Mark may have sadly lost the psychedelic narrative impulse of yore, but it’s been replaced by a quiet vocal intensity.

The Fall is a notoriously uneven band, and one worries that Smith can no longer tell a good gig or a decent album from a bad one, so well drilled are the members into the group’s sound (despite Smith’s allegations that he only recruits non-Fall fans, recent line-ups have clearly done their homework). Ignoring twin basses and some American accents this gig still sounds exactly like The Fall, and the worry lingers that there’s nothing new left to do with the format. Then again “sounds exactly like The Fall” is one of the greatest superlatives in our dogeared critical lexicon, so who’s to complain? And when the band come on for an unsuspected second encore, with house lights up and half the audience already out the door, fuzzily reinterpreting recent favourite “Blindness”, doubts about the continued relevance of The Fall evaporate. And, hey, didn’t Mark audibly thank the audience at one point? Some things do change, after all…